Why We Are Giving Restructuring A Chance – APC

Bolaji Abdullahi, publicity secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), says the party set up a restructuring committee so it could emerge victorious in the 2019 election.

Speaking during an interview on The Osasu Show, Abdullahi said since restructuring was part of the party’s manifesto in the electioneering campaign of 2015, it will not be able to ask Nigerians to re-elect it if it failed to fulfil its promise to restructure the country.

Asked why the APC decided to consider the idea of restructuring after many of its members, including President Muhammadu Buhari, had said no to it, Abdullahi said individual opinions should not be substituted for that of the party.

Osasu Igbinedion, the anchor, had asked: “But isn’t it very opportunistic of the APC government to propose this 13 point agenda less than a year to the 2019 election? Are you doing this because you want to win re-election in 2019?”

Abdullahi responded: “Yes, of course, yes… if you promise people something, the only way you can go back to them and say vote for us again is that you get it done.

“The whole idea on restructuring is anchored on the desire to have more efficient government and to bring governance closer to the people and put people in control of their lives.

“These individual positions don’t reflect the position of the party. What determines the position of the party is what is contained in the party’s manifesto.

“The government is produced by the party, therefore, the party takes responsibility for everything the government does.”
Asked why Nasir-el-Rufai, governor of Kaduna state, who is “not an advocate of restructuring” was made to head the committee, Abdullahi jocularly said maybe it was a plan to convert him.

He said el-Rufai never said he did not believe in restructuring, adding that the governor did not enforce his opinion on the committee, in the course of discharging his duties.

“Maybe the plan was to convert him. There is nowhere Nasir el-Rufai said he doesn’t believe in restructuring,” he said.

“What he said is that all those people talking about restructuring today don’t even know what it means and that these people were merely opportunistic. And that they were just trying to exploit the public sentiments for restructuring to promote their political agenda.

“And I must say to his credit that he never in anyway at any point in the course of our work impose his sentiment, opinion or idea on the committee.”